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- Q1158877 subject Q8411861.
- Q1158877 subject Q8817212.
- Q1158877 abstract "The elevator paradox is a paradox first noted by Marvin Stern and George Gamow, physicists who had offices on different floors of a multi-story building. Gamow, who had an office near the bottom of the building noticed that the first elevator to stop at his floor was most often going down, while Stern, who had an office near the top, noticed that the first elevator to stop at his floor was most often going up.At first sight, this created the impression that perhaps elevator cars were being manufactured in the middle of the building and sent upwards to the roof and downwards to the basement to be dismantled. Clearly this was not the case. But how could the observation be explained?".
- Q1158877 thumbnail Elevator_paradox-compat.svg?width=300.
- Q1158877 wikiPageExternalLink ElevatorParadox.html.
- Q1158877 wikiPageExternalLink elevator.htm.
- Q1158877 wikiPageExternalLink elevator2.htm.
- Q1158877 wikiPageWikiLink Q1257456.
- Q1158877 wikiPageWikiLink Q132911.
- Q1158877 wikiPageWikiLink Q169470.
- Q1158877 wikiPageWikiLink Q205.
- Q1158877 wikiPageWikiLink Q483372.
- Q1158877 wikiPageWikiLink Q59478.
- Q1158877 wikiPageWikiLink Q677706.
- Q1158877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8411861.
- Q1158877 wikiPageWikiLink Q8817212.
- Q1158877 comment "The elevator paradox is a paradox first noted by Marvin Stern and George Gamow, physicists who had offices on different floors of a multi-story building.".
- Q1158877 label "Elevator paradox".
- Q1158877 depiction Elevator_paradox-compat.svg.